Resembling or characteristic of a prophet or prophecy.
Sinónimos
Examples for "sibylline"
Examples for "sibylline"
1They knew well that sibylline look on the face of Miranda Brown.
2All right, when you get on these sibylline airs, I say no more.
3At length the temple was destroyed by fire, and the original sibylline books perished.
4The governess, who was clever, studied Cæsar's hand and expressed herself in sibylline terms:
5He wrote to congratulate him, and Perrotin thanked him in a few prudent and sibylline words:
1See chapter 20 for the general divinatory meanings of this card.
2This is a good blend to use to consecrate and charge your divinatory tools.
3She'd consulted it, the divinatory deck, the astrological signs, everything.
4It was an ancient artefact of the divinatory Dragons Deck.
5Geomantic Figures: There are sixteen geomantic figures which, in a divinatory operation, are randomly generated.
1Would the mantic sight have faded on its own soon enough?
2Wynn forgot nausea and vertigo and everything else that plagued her mantic sight.
3She felt it move like the black ribbons Wynn had seen with her mantic sight.
4London's workforce barely registered this mantic transformation.
5Of them, only a few can learn the proper mantic skills to amount to anything as an adept.
1When Obama gets her to recount family history, she is a vatic presence.
2The plotline about western powers scrabbling for resources in the Middle East seems horribly vatic.
3He smiled at her with his vatic calm.
4But his simple speech hid vatic power.
5It flashes from casual naturalism to gory horror, from game playing to terrible earnest, from the vatic to the casual.
1She stayed, however, in Paris, which she apostrophises with Sibyllic candour:-
264. sibyllic: usually "sibylline," prophetic; from "sibyl."